process of cloning

process of cloning

The goals of science might be to expand human knowledge and capacity to create change, but it is always important to keep in mind that science does not exist in a vacuum. On the contrary, science is an integral part of social and cultural frameworks that have their own goals. The push and pull of society’s complex interests sometimes transform scientific discoveries into significant controversies.

One such discovery is the process of cloning. Cloning, the act of creating an exact genetic copy of an organism, is something that happens naturally in some kinds of cells. It is also something that scientists have been trying to do on a much larger scale since the discovery of DNA.

Do some background reading about cloning using the following resources:

National Human Genome Research Institute Fact Sheet on Cloning:

http://www.genome.gov/25020028

The National Institutes of Health Office of Science Education, Research in the News:

http://science.education.nih.gov/home2.nsf/Educational+ResourcesTopicsGenetics/BC5086E34E4DBA0085256CCD006F01CB

Explore the process of cloning animals here:http://www.teachersdomain.org/asset/biot09_int_cloning/

Although the cloning of entire animals represented a significant milestone, cloning at the cellular or gene level was achieved even earlier, and continues to be an application in use today. Learn about how genes are cloned here:

http://www.teachersdomain.org/asset/biot09_int_geneclone/

Come to Seminar prepared to discuss:

  1. What are some past, present, and future applications for cloning?

 

Can you envision a time in your life where cloning technologies may be useful to you, or do you benefit from them already?

 

What are some of the challenges associated with the cloning process?

 

What policies do you feel should be in place to regulate cloning? Consider the following:

 

What creatures can be allowed to be cloned?

 

Should the purpose of the clone be considered?

 

Who should have the ability to produce clones and/or research the process further?

 

Should humans be cloned?

 

Should these regulations be the same regardless of the cloning process (at the gene or cellular level as well as an entire organism)?

work to do : Write and submit a 400 word paper discussing the questions posed in the Seminar description.

Submitting Your Assignment

Save your copy of the assignment in a location and with a name that you will remember. Be sure to use the “Save As” option to include your first and last name in the title of the document. For example, your assignment might be calledShawn_Edwards_Seminar1.doc

When you are ready to submit it, click on the Dropbox and complete the steps below

Click the link that says Submit an Assignment.

In the “Submit to Basket” menu, select Unit 7: Seminar

In the “Comments” field, include at least the title of your paper.

Click the Add Attachments button.

Follow the steps listed to attach your Word document.

To view your graded work, come back to the Dropbox or go to the Gradebook after your instructor has evaluated it. Click the Dropbox to access it.

Make sure that you save a copy of your submitted assignment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

solution preview

What are some past, present, and future applications for cloning?

The discovery of cloning has made it to appear hot in the news for the last decades. For this reason, many people have been coming up with solution for determining the benefits associated with cloning. First and foremost, researchers found out that cloning had developed under the hypothesis that genetic materials can be transmitted and modified to create an organism using a specific DNA. To prove this, researchers used the sheep Dolly which was the first mammal to be cloned from a differentiated adult cell. This process impacted positively and another dolly sheep was duplicated and this has been the past, present, and future applications for cloning.

Total word count:411words